Thursday, December 12, 2013

Sachin retired….. on his own
special terms in a grand manner … and that walk to 22 yards and his bending
down to touch the ground were immortalized. When
Sachin played his historical 200th test, another player not so popular but
equally committed achieved a grand feat – that 150 tests in the same match…..
that was Shivenarine Chanderpaul. On
Sachin’s farewell, camera focussed on young Arjun Tendulkar too…. what Sachin could not … Shivnarine has achieved !!!!!

The chubby Arjun Tendulkar is 14 and making a decent
name for himself as a batsman in the Mumbai junior leagues… on that day Sachin
said - “As a father, I will say leave Arjun Tendulkar
alone” – he pleaded to the media to let Arjun
enjoy the cricket, and not burden
him with expectations. Sachin was to say humourously ‘If I had such pressure on
me, I would have ended up with a pen in my hands because my father was a
literature professor.’ In less
than 24 hours from bidding adieu to International cricket, Sachin was to say
this of his son who reportedly is also madly in love with cricket. After his retirement also, press followed him
stating that the next day - Tendulkar laughed about waking up at 6.50am,
showering quickly, ready to rush down to the ground, when it suddenly dawned
that for the first time in a quarter of a century he need not bother. So he made a cup of tea for himself, relaxed,
dined with his wife and thought of nothing else. Just a day earlier, he had received a call
from the Prime Minister of the Nation to inform him of the special moment of
his being conferred the nation’s ‘Jewel of India’ honour. Tendulkar, adamant that he left cricket at
the perfect time and without a single regret, dedicated the award to his mum
Rajni and the “millions and millions of mothers in India who, like her,
sacrifice thousands of things for their children. I would like to share this
award with all of them”. Sachin and his exploits would ever be remembered by
all of us who were mesmerized by his batting.

Tagenarine made his debut as
an opener for Guyana,
captained by spinner Veerasammy Permaul. That may not matter much until you
read his full name of Chanderpaul yes, son of illustrious father.

Shivnarine Chanderpaul has proved to be
dodgy and difficult to dismiss customer for most International bowlers. Born in Aug 1974, this lefie has made 11040 runs in 151 Tests (257 innings) and
when you add them to 8778 one day runs in 268 matches / 251 innings they sound
too impressive. He has 39 International
hundreds in all. He never seems to play
in the V, or off the front foot, but uses soft hands, canny deflections, and a
whiplash pull-shot to maintain a Test average of around 50. Throughout his
career, he has managed to keep his own standards at a remarkably high level
despite the perennial problems that West Indies
have faced. A stint as West Indies captain followed in 2005-06, and though he
celebrated with a double-century in front of his home fans in Guyana, it was
clear that captaincy was affecting his batting, and in 2006 he gave it up to
concentrate on his main job.

His greatest contribution, though, has been in
holding together West Indies' fragile batting
line-up after Lara's retirement. While things have crumbled all around him in West Indies cricket, Shivnarine Chanderpaul has managed
to not only maintain his standards but also raised the bar consistently
throughout a career that has already lasted almost 20 years and shows no sign
of ending. The Mumbai Test is his 150th, placed him in a select group of seven
who've played that many Tests. The price that he puts on his wicket has always
been high and has scored against all. No bowler has dismissed him more than
seven times; Anil Kumble has got him out most often with seven, while Kallis,
Angus Fraser and Danish Kaneria have dismissed him six times each.

Shivnarine Chanderpaul's son Tagenarine,
who's often known as "Brandon", made
his first-class debut for Guyana
earlier this year, aged only 16. In his fourth match, against Trinidad and Tobago in Port-of-Spain in March,
he played alongside his father, who made a valiant 108 in the second innings as
Guyana
fell 45 short of their victory target of 376. There has never yet been an
instance of a father and son playing alongside each other in a Test match, the
nearest approach being that Chris Cairns' Test debut for New Zealand was
only four years after his father Lance's final appearance. There have been a
few instances in first-class cricket, though, the most recent being in April
1996, when Heath Streak's 46-year-old father Denis was called up, owing to a
player shortage, to play alongside his son for Matabeleland in Zimbabwe's Logan
Cup final. Most of the other instances came in county cricket in England quite a long time ago: there was one
celebrated Championship match, in Derby
in June 1922, in which father-and-son Bestwicks, playing for Derbyshire, bowled
to father-and-son Quaifes for Warwickshire. [thanks to Cricinfo and Ask Steve
column for this]

As the 17-year-old Tagenarine,
starts out on his journey as a professional cricketer – perhaps there could be
a time when both father and son play together for the West Indies National team
and have a century partnership